Pepto Bismol’s active ingredient is indeed bismuth subsalicylate.
I used to work in the metal industry and we an alloy that we could add to one out products was lead-bismuth. It turned the metal into a putrid shade of green. Because of environmental impacts of lead, the alloy was phased out.
Interesting tidbit from the wiki article on Bismuth.
Half life of more than a billion times times the estimated age of the universe?
1a: Therefore, alliances should be brief, defined and no hard feelings when they end. They’re not your “friends”, they’re your competition. You can be friends afterward.
1b: Run your own race. Obsessing about what the other teams think of you will kill you. And trying to “get” another team never, ever works.
2: Read the fucking CLUE. Then read it again!
3: Know how to drive a fucking stickshift transmission.
4: Stay hydrated, or you will get fucked up.*
5: First thing you do at the arrival airport (or port or train station), buy a fucking MAP!
5b: If you’re lost, ask people. Don’t just hope you can figure it out.
Keep your shit (clues, possessions, SHOES!, passports, etc) with you at all times unless you’re at a race-designated backpack drop-point.
This is the Amazing Race, not Dr. Freud’s Therapy Clinic. This is NOT the time to see if you want to marry him, it’s not the time to “work out issues with your dad”, it’s not the time to say “Our relationship is really rocky right now, so we’re going to go do the most stressful thing of our lives.” You’re in the race to win, not to self-actualize yourself and your partner.
*Why was this not a problem for the first 14, 15 seasons? I don’t recall anyone fainting of dehydration, and in the earlier seasons you had to pay for EVERYTHING. Including your own water. Now they give it away to the contestants. What changed? (other than the average IQ of the contestants going down about 20 points )
Didn’t know until now and never would have made the connection since they are spelled different.
What pattern? Have you looked at the map of the area? There’s a lot of mineral type street names but not really element street names. I’d also say that unless you get a map of Broken Hill itself the majority of maps from a tourist office will not have all the little streets on them. Wiki says it has a population of about 18,000. While not a huge city, that’s still pretty big and I can’t think of a free map for a city that size has every little street. I also think that the majority of people do not know what bismuth is, though I’ll have to ask around and really see if the people around me know.
You don’t even have to come close to knowing the periodic table by heart. You just have to know or be somewhat familiar with what the chemical symbols stand for. Hg is a little difficult, because it has no relation to the English word (it comes from Latin hydrargyrum) but Bi is really easy if you know about bismuth. Maybe I’m just weird, though…
I don’t know the whole periodic table by heart, but I knew mercury and bismuth. No problem. (I do often suspect that I would kick ass if I could get on the Race, but who really knows.)
By the way, after they went to the sports ground (home of the magpies), changed into kangaroo costumes, and ran to the next clue, how did they all pile into their cars again? The Amazing Producers must have had people on hand to move the vehicles for them. Seems like an opportunity to cheat, just follow the guy who takes your vehicle to the next clue.
I did check google maps just now. Not as many element-themed street names as I might have expected, and there’s no telling what route the teams drove on their way to the stadium. I found the intersection of Mercury and Bismuth; was wondering how far they had to run in those costumes but wasn’t sure where the stadium was that they started from.
According to the Aussie rules football website, the stadium is at the “Memorial Oval” at google maps. Assuming they start on the West side of the stadium, it’s about 1.3 km as the kangaroo hops to the intersection.
Here’s a link to the Google Maps. The stadium marked Memorial Oval on the map appears to be the Magpies’ field, or at least, its what Google thinks. Bismuth & Mercury wasn’t exactly across the street. A pretty good challenge for the teams, I think.
Judging from Google Maps, from Memorial Oval (which Google Maps points out when I asked for “Central Football Club”) to the corner of Bismuth and Mercury is about six blocks.
Both my wife and I knew “bismuth;” I knew “mercury.” Just for fun, here’s an offical visitor’s map of Broken Hill. I like to think I would have recognized the Bromide, Sulphide, Chloride Streets, etc., and if looking closely Cobal and Wolfram.
I wonder if it would be a better strategy to try to find someone with a computer to Google Map these things than to ask random people how to find them? Then again, when the one group did get the woman to look up the definitions of Hg and Bi, she basically recognized them as street names and pointed them in the right direction, so it would probably be a wash, at best.
Indeed! If you are really bored, you can “drive” the whole way using Street View! Pretty amazing how thoroughly Australia was covered by the Google Cars…
It’s probably tough to tell what would be the best strategy, since it depends on how recognizable the clue is. Random people are easy to find, Google access is harder, and I don’t think you could know how recognizible a clue devoid of context (like “To Sail To Stop” or “Mercury and Bismuth”) is to a local. I figure I might ask like six to ten random locals before I seriously started looking for an internet cafe, depending on the relative availability of random locals and internet access. Or random locals with internet access.
These days in certain parts of the world, it’s practically the same thing. Ask random locals if any of them has a smart phone and then do a web search right on the streetcorner. The only advantage of an internet cafe is you could print out a map to where you’re trying to go and figure the quickest route.
[QUOTE=zut;13514939Jaime & Cara (Season 14/2nd place/3.92 average) (down from “Rapido!”) We didn’t see that much from this team either, and what we did was pretty mediocre. I don’t see this team lasting that long, even discounting what looks to be high drama next episode.[/QUOTE]
I don’t see why these two are rated so low. They finished second in their previous season to a very good team. Yes, they were ninth on this leg, but the time difference between fourth and ninth was minutes, if not seconds, and they knew very well that they were not going to be eliminated. They’ve never, in two seasons, been even close to being eliminated except for at the very end of their first season, when everyone left was close to being eliminated.
They are strong and athletic, don’t seem to have any personal issues, and are smart and efficient. The only teams that I would put ahead of them are the cowboys and the globetrotters, based purely on athleticism. With the less obvious clues and the trouble they had with the flag puzzle, I’m not too sure about the cowboys.
Zut it was called called “Lost”. I think there were 2 seasons, but they were very short (maybe 6 episodes per season). And I think it was 2000 or 2001.
That show was insane, they dropped 2 people (who didn’t know each other!) in the middle of nowhere with no money! All they knew was they had to get to New York in a month (I think the 2nd season they had to get to Los Angeles).
In Season 1 they were dropped-off somehwere in South America, the contestants didn’t even know what country they were in!
Aww, I loved Treasure Hunters! It was through watching it that I found TAR, which seems so ridiculous to me now. Can’t believe I’d not watched it before. That show was a lot of fun.
I gotta say, all of this teamwork is making TAR very uninteresting. You might as well dispense with the clues and make it into just a race with no clues and random bunching points.